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You are here -> Music / Albums / Indie Sunday, 07 September, 2008
PLANETNOTION TELEVISION!
CAMERA-FOLK AND FILM EDITORS WANTED!
Planet Notion is looking for guys and dolls to film and edit features for its new TV channel, PNTV. Accompanying Notion to artist interviews, gigs, fashion shows, festivals and international events, you will be skilled, passionate and full of ideas about how to produce shit-hot video content. Camera-folk will be experienced and ideally have their own equipment, or at least access to equipment, while editors must be able to turn projects around quickly, and with stylistic flare. If you can both film and edit content, we would especially like to hear from you! These casual, unpaid positions would be ideal for those looking to develop their showreels, and to get the chance to travel, film major artists and top events.
 
Please email lucy@musichqmedia.com if you’re interested in getting involved, cheers!
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Indie
Superabundance
Young Knives
Transgressive
Indie
Albums from Transgressive (Battle and Foals) are always welcome, and the first half of Young Knives’ second album sets the bar so high for 2008, it’ll be gloves off the moment competitors hear it. It’s a fantastic start, with the energetic ‘Fit 4 U’ kicking off with the kind of 60’s jauntiness Supergrass used to wow/annoy with. Next the similarly chorus-loaded ‘Terra Firma’ and ‘Up All Night’ stake their hit single status, with the kind of rabble-rousing cynicism bus drivers must dread hearing on the upper deck, the former even seductively underpinned by new fangled synthesisers. ‘Counters’ is another highlight: surging, pastoral rock, with dogs making a welcome return to pop since Pet Shop Boys’ ‘Suburbia’; its atmospheric middle 8 even segues into a handclapped groove and some glorious nonsense about hosepipes. ‘Turn Tail’ is early U2, punk with a velvet heart, its gentle croon and swelling strings ending in a cacophony of experimental victory. Meanwhile ‘Dyed In The Wool’ puts sheep as protagonists in song and it’s a romp. The album isn’t blemish free, ‘Flies’ somehow outstays its brief welcome, while ‘Mummy Light The Fire’ has such a fantastic, shy, guitar break it needs more room to breathe. Then, following ‘Current Of The River’s wide-screen indie, arrives a secret track, which after you’ve forgotten the album is playing, bursts frantically into life. Once you’ve recovered, its mockney fairground jape does little to compensate. But overall it’s a well-tempered success, The Gang of Four influence remains, though Mogwai’s producer, Tony Doogan, as expected, provides the instrumentation greater voice, reining the starkness in at the right points. It loses a little focus towards the end, but there’s orchestrated magic amongst interweaved vocals, lending a variety and depth to these instantly likeable tracks. The intended videos for each song promise to be equally interesting. TH

tags: young knives | superabundance | transgressive | fit 4 u | terra firma | up all night | counters | turn tail | dyed in the wool | mummy light the fire | current of the river | tony doogan |





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